Viewing Test Run Details - Properties Guide
Viewing Test Run Details
To view test run details:
- Click on any test run row in the table
- The test run details view opens, showing:
Test Run Information:
- Title and description
- Status and progress
- Custom fields
- Test case count and completion
Test Cases List:
- All test cases in the test run
- Test case status (Passed, Failed, Blocked, Skipped, Not Executed)
- Assigned users
- Test case details and results
Filters:
- Filter test cases by status, priority, severity, type
- Filter by assigned user
- Search test cases
Test Run Properties
Each test run has the following properties:
- Test Run ID: Unique identifier for the test run
- Title: Name of the test run
- Description: Brief summary
- Status: Overall status (Not Started, In Progress, Completed)
- Project: Project the test run belongs to
- Test Cases: List of test cases in the test run
- Test Case Statuses: Distribution of test case statuses
- Completion Percentage: Percentage of completed test cases
- Created Date: When the test run was created
- Updated Date: When the test run was last modified
- Created By: User who created the test run
- Custom Fields: Project-specific fields
Understanding Test Run Status
Status Calculation
Test run status is calculated based on test case execution:
- Not Started: No test cases have been executed (all are “Not Executed”)
- In Progress: Some test cases have been executed, but not all
- Completed: All test cases have been executed (none are “Not Executed”)
Progress Tracking
The progress bar shows:
- Visual Representation: Color-coded bars showing status distribution
- Completion Count: Number of completed test cases vs total
- Status Breakdown: Visual breakdown of Passed, Failed, Blocked, Skipped, Not Executed
Test Case Sources
Test cases in a test run can come from multiple sources:
- Manual Selection: Explicitly selected test cases
- Requirements: Test cases linked to selected requirements
- Test Suites: Test cases included in selected test suites
Each test case shows badges indicating its source, helping you understand where test cases came from.
Test Runs vs Releases
Test Runs
- Independent: Can be created independently
- Flexible: Can include any test cases
- Quick Execution: For ad-hoc or quick testing
- Single Execution: Typically run once
Releases
- Structured: Part of release planning
- Timeline-Based: Has start and end dates
- Multiple Executions: Can contain multiple test runs
- Release Context: Tied to specific project versions
Note: Test runs can be created within releases or independently, depending on your workflow.
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